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Germain Bazin
Germain René Michel Bazin was a French art historian, curator at the Louvre Museum from 1951 to 1965. |
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Germain Delavigne
Louis Marie Germain Delavigne was a French playwright and librettist. |
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Germain Nouveau
Germain Marie Bernard Nouveau (1851–1920) was a French poet associated with the symbolist movement. |
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Germaine de Staël
Anne Louise Germaine de Staël-Holstein, commonly known as Madame de Staël, was a French woman of letters and political theorist, the daughter of banker and French finance minister Jacques Necker and Suzanne Curchod, a leading salonnière. She was a voice of moderation in the French Revolution and the Napoleonic era up to the French Restoration. She was present at the Estates General of 1789 and at the 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. Her intellectual collaboration with Benjamin Constant between 1794 and 1810 made them one of the most celebrated intellectual couples of their time. She discovered sooner than others the tyrannical character and designs of Napoleon. For many years she lived as an exile – firstly during the Reign of Terror and later due to personal persecution by Napoleon. |
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Germaine Greer
Germaine Greer is an Australian writer and public intellectual, regarded as one of the major voices of the second-wave feminism movement in the latter half of the 20th century. |
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Germain-François Poullain de Saint-Foix
Germain-François Poullain de Saint-Foix was an 18th-century French writer and playwright. |
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German Getsevich
German Alexandrovich Getsevich was a Russian poet, prose writer, translator. |
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German Plisetsky
German Borisovich Plisetsky was a notable Russian poet and translator. |
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German Sadulaev
German Umaralievich Sadulaev is a Russian writer of Chechen origin. |
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Germanicus
Germanicus Julius Caesar was an ancient Roman general and politician most famously known for his campaigns in Germania. The son of Nero Claudius Drusus and Antonia the Younger, Germanicus was born into an influential branch of the patrician gens Claudia. The agnomen Germanicus was added to his full name in 9 BC when it was posthumously awarded to his father in honor of his victories in Germania. In AD 4 he was adopted by his paternal uncle Tiberius, who succeeded Augustus as Roman emperor a decade later. As a result, Germanicus became an official member of the gens Julia, another prominent family, to which he was related on his mother's side. His connection to the Julii Caesares was further consolidated through a marriage between him and Agrippina the Elder, a granddaughter of Augustus. He was also the father of Caligula, the maternal grandfather of Nero, and the older brother of Claudius. |